RBNZ launches The Dashboard: an innovation in prudential bank disclosures

In a dash for more transparency, the Reserve Bank launched theBank Financial Strength Dashboard. This is a truly innovative on-line tool for sharing prudential and financial information on New Zealand banks. The Dashboard contains more than 100 individual metrics on the financial strength of banks. The RBNZ updates the information every quarter.

A world standard for bank disclosures?

Compared to other initiatives, the dashboard stands out in user-friendliness and relevance. The Federal Reserve bank of Chicago also offers bank data, … lots of it. However, the format is Spartanic. All data is in csv format, and data definitions are hard to understand. Perhaps the Federal Reserve expects others to summarize the data for the general public. However, I am not aware of any party transforming the U.S. bank data into a more palatable format. So, yes, the U.S. offers rich data, but you need a PhD to get your head around it.

The European Banking Authority publishes rich data on banks too. However, it does so on an ir-regular basis. Once in a while for a transparency exercise. Once in a while for a stress test. This hampers time-series analyses, thus making it hard to assess developments in the European banking sector over time. The EBA data is also hard to figure. Every release of data has different data definitions.

So, yes, the Reserve Bank strikes a sensible balance by offering a relevant set of metrics on a quarterly basis.

The Reserve Bank also acknowledges different users groups. For ‘casual’ users it offers eye-candy graphs, like the one below:

I, as a researcher, could not care less about the graphs. So, specially for me, the Reserve Bank offers the data in an Excel file. Thank you Reserve Bank!

The public also should thank the Reserve Bank for the dashboard, as it displays animations that explain the metrics. The dashboard and the Excel file show how the metrics are calculated.

Where is the ‘but’?

Is the Dashboard all hunky-dory? For sure, disclosures like this deserve following. But, in the current benign economic environment risks are building up. These risks may be hidden form the general public. My suggestion for the Reserve Bank would be to include stress test data. This way, the public would be able to assess our banks in good times and in bad times.

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